- White Castle aromatherapy candles? I’ve never eaten there, but this doesn’t sound like a good thing at all. [via]
- Stephen Hawking says: don’t talk to aliens. But what if they offer us candy? Space candy! [via]
- Digital Domesday book unlocked, underlining the dangers inherent in digital archiving. [via]
- By now you’ve seen Jon Stewart’s interview with Ken Blackwell, right? If not, you really should. Mostly, Stewart just has to let Blackwell talk.
- And finally, I got a kick out of this Super Mario Bros. clone: Enough Plumbers. [via]
games
Tuesday various
- Thinking of the Past or Future Causes Us to Sway Backward or Forward [via]:
University of Aberdeen psychological scientists Lynden Miles, Louise Nind and Neil Macrae conducted a study to measure this in the lab. They fitted participants with a motion sensor while they imagined either future or past events. The researchers found that thinking about past or future events can literally move us: Engaging in mental time travel (a.k.a. chronesthesia) resulted in physical movements corresponding to the metaphorical direction of time. Those who thought of the past swayed backward while those who thought of the future moved forward.
- Gene Roddenberry’s original pitch for Star Trek (PDF). [via] I keep meaning to finally watch the original series, now that it’s on Blu-Ray, since I’ve never seen more than bits and pieces. (That way, I’d also get to read Zack Handlen’s reviews. He’s had some interesting things to say so far about The Next Generation.)
- Erotica for the blind? [via]
- You’ve got to give Sita Sings the Blues director Nina Paley credit for sticking to her anti-DRM guns.
- And finally, Dr. Horrible’s Singalong Game [via]
Tuesday various
- Can video games be art? Roger Ebert sure doesn’t think so.
- Support for keeping marijuana illegal in California may be coming from an unlikely source: pot growers. [via]
- Meanwhile, why am I not at all surprised by revelations that Bush, Cheney, and Rumsfeld covered up that hundreds of innocent men were sent to the Guantánamo Bay? [via]
- Brian K. Vaughan’s “post-apocalyptic heist movie” does sound very cool. [via]
- And finally, xkcd: “Stop spoiling my future with your slightly more distant one.”
Peascod’al Activity
The “Forgotten English” for today was the phrase “peascod wooing,” which means…well, let me just give you the quote from W.C. Hazlitt’s 1870 book, Faiths and Folklore of the British Isles:
If a young woman, while she is shelling peas, meets with a pod of nine [peas], the first young man who crosses the threshold afterwards is to be her husband. In Scotland it is, or was, a custom to rub with peastraw [fodder made from pea stalks and leaves] a girl to whom her lover has not been true.
If I’d known it was that easy… This afternoon, my mother suggested I join a singles’ bowling league advertised in the events calendar of a local marketplace newspaper. But apparently I just need to start hanging around women who shell a lot of peas, perhaps surreptitiously walking in and out of thresholds as they do so. I’ve actually been to the “rock ‘n’ roll” bowling this group participates in, not as part of any singles group, but just with friends. It was fun, but as a few people pointed out when I mentioned this earlier on Twitter, if I joined the group, I’d almost certainly find it populated by a bunch of guys and maybe one scared, or more likely bored, girl. And I’m not sure paying to hang out with a bunch of dudes who’d rather be meeting women is really what I want to be doing.
It doesn’t help that the advertisement also suggests, for more information, that one visit the group’s Geocities page.
Beyond that, it was just a really nice day here. The weather was more like early summer than spring, so I went for a nice walk around the neighborhood after lunch. Along the way I listened to Ken Plume’s “A Bit a of a Chat with Bill Corbett, of MST3K and Rifftrax fame. It was a decent interview, and I think Corbett offered some decent writing advice.
When I got home, I discovered I had received an early birthday present in the mail. Heather sent me a really great assortment of Canadian literature, a box full of neat looking books I’m eager to dive into. I may take one of them with me on my trip next week to San Jose, since I’m likely to have some down time during the conference — and plenty of it on the plane trips from one coast to the other. (I’m about halfway through Phillip Pullman’s The Subtle Knife, and I don’t expect the remainder to last me through the rest of next week, much less to next Sunday.) Heather also included a Moleskine notebook, for my own writing, which I neglect a whole lot more than I should. She’s a really good writer herself, and inspiring, so I’ll have to make damn sure I make use of the notebook. The whole package was an unexpected delight — you can’t really go wrong sending me a box full of books — and I don’t feel quite so bad about turning thirty-three next week.
Beyond the walk and the weather and the books, I spent some of the day playing episode three of Wallace and Gromit’s Grand Adventures, once I could actually get the installation file to download. And then this evening I watched Paranormal Activity, which I guess was effectively scary to a point, especially on what was clearly such a low budget, but also a little disappointing. And I say that having been a pretty big fan of The Blair Witch Project, to which this movie has inevitably been compared. I think A.O. Scott said it best in his review:
By any serious critical standard, “Paranormal Activity†is not a very good movie. It looks and sounds terrible. Its plot is thin and perforated with illogic. The acting occasionally rises to the level of adequacy. But it does have an ingenious, if not terribly original, formal conceit — that everything on-screen is real-life amateur video — that is executed with enough skill to make you jump and shriek. There is no lingering dread. You are not likely to be troubled by the significance of this ghost story or tantalized by its mysteries. It’s more like a trip to the local haunted house, where even the fake blood and the tape-loop of howling wind you have encountered 100 times before can momentarily freak you out.
It’s effective, and probably was a whole lot more so in the midnight movie screenings the studio promoted it with, but it’s not particularly clever or memorable.
Though there is one moment in the film I really liked. Horror movies of “found footage” like this — like Blair Witch or Cloverfield or Quarantine — often have to make excuses for why a character persists in filming events rather than, you know, running in terror from them. There’s plenty of that here — lots of “put down the camera” and “we need a record of this” talk — but there’s one moment where one character says, “Turn off the camera,” and the other character just does. It’s not an important or eventful moment in the movie, but it’s a nice, realistic little detail that’s often missing from movies of this ilk.
(I think I may have to check out the Rifftrax version all the same, though.)
Anyway, that was my Saturday.
Wednesday various
- The very real problem of digital decay:
Electronically produced drafts, correspondence and editorial comments, sweated over by contemporary poets, novelists and nonfiction authors, are ultimately just a series of digits — 0’s and 1’s — written on floppy disks, CDs and hard drives, all of which degrade much faster than old-fashioned acid-free paper. Even if those storage media do survive, the relentless march of technology can mean that the older equipment and software that can make sense of all those 0’s and 1’s simply don’t exist anymore.
Imagine having a record but no record player.
Does this mean the people in my office who print out a copy of everything are on to something?
There’s also the fact that, on a purely aesthetic level, digital archives tend to be pretty boring things. A novelist’s handwritten notes, for instance, are a lot more interesting to future readers than his half-finished draft in Microsoft Word. I think Emory University’s archive of Salman Rushdie’s work — this “access through emulation to a born-digital archive” — is a neat way to address this fact. [via]
- The writer and editor in me liked this: Sentenced.
- Fed Up With Lunch: The School Lunch Project — a teacher eats her school’s cafeteria food every day for lunch, with pictures! [via]
- I don’t know that being able to identify Star Wars figurines with your mouth really makes you much of a fan so much as just a really weird kid. [via]
- And finally, FutureStates : Play [via]: